Title: Phosphorus from Agriculture: Riverine Impacts Study PARIS
1Phosphorus from Agriculture Riverine Impacts
Study(PARIS)
Start date September 2003 End date August 2008
2Diffuse Phosphorus Impacts in Rivers
- Current knowledge
- Eutrophication impacts based on lakes
- Diffuse P inputs in PP and DP (lt 0.45 µm) forms
- Variable, episodic and arrive in winter
- Questions
- Is riverine ecology sensitive to diffuse P
inputs? - What level of P input is a problem?
- How important is the timing of diffuse P inputs
? - How significant are P-supplies from bed
sediments and porewaters? - How does P fractionation (e.g. DPPP ratio)
affect impacts?
3PARIS
Hypothesis Land management directly influences
river ecology by altering the concentration of P
in the water column bed sediments
Aim To better understand the impact of high-risk
farming practices on river nutrient chemistry and
ecology
- Benefits
- Assess the extent of P load reduction required
- Target key practices for control
- Inform catchment management planning
4PARIS Experimental Approach
- Paired study headwater streams (agriculturally
impacted v. unimpacted) sites, with variable P
loss risk - Response to implementation of management change
- Apply manures to control area (Loddington)
- Adopt BMPs in high-risk area (Sem)
Loddington Arable farming on drained clay soils
Coughton Brook Intensive row crops on dispersive
silty soils.
Sem Intensive dairy farming on drained clay
soils.
Colebrook Mixed beef/dairy on drained clay
soils.
5PARIS Work Programme
- Monitor flux and temporal pattern of PP and DP
inputs from agriculture - Examine chemical impacts P concentrations in
water column and bed sediments/porewaters - Examine in-stream fate of P inputs in relation
to sediment dynamics and P uptake release by
sediments and biota - Monitor ecological structure (biodiversity) and
function (processes)
Focus on headwater stream sites Single
agricultural practices are only detectable at
headwater stream level Eliminate effects
of point-source discharges
6Importance of eliminating influence of point
sources PSYCHIC agricultural high risk/rural
sub-catchments (lt c. 100km2) appear strongly
influenced by small point-source inputs
Sewage SRPB 9.5
Importance of in-stream uptake of SRP by
sediments/biota
7Role of river bed sediments
- Bed sediments provide a key link between
- Agricultural inputs of sediment-associated P,
delivered under winter high flows - And
- P-availability at times of ecological
sensitivity (i.e. spring summer low flows) - Storage of diffuse sediment-associated P on
river bed - SRP exchange between bed-sediment and river
water - Dissolved P in porewaters sediment-associated
P available to rooted plants and benthic
algae -
8PARIS Bed sediment sampling
- River bed - highly heterogeneous environment
-
- Nature of substrate
- Water and sediment residence time
- Light exposure
- Reach-scale mapping of river-bed environment
- Sampling based on bio-geomorphologically defined
Representative Functional Habitats allow
comparison between impacted unimpacted streams - Measurements
- Total sediment nutrient concentrations,
- Bioavailable P concentrations
- Equilibrium P concentrations,
- Porewater SRP concentrations
9- PARIS - sediments and chemistry
- How does nutrient availability in different
functional habitats vary with respect to
unimpacted and impacted streams and for different
high-risk agricultural practices? - How do bed sediment nutrient availability and
river water nutrient concentrations relate to
ecological indicators? - How does bed sediment nutrient availability
change following the introduction of P-control
measures? - Can we quantify changes in river-water P-fluxes
along the stream during the growing season and
how might these be attributed to biotic (plant
uptake) and abiotic (sediment exchange)
processes?
10Agricultural P inputs
- Diffuse P signal
- Characterise land use, P inputs and
- land management in each headwater catchment
- Routine and storm-event based monitoring of PP
and DP forms - Targeted sampling of field surface/subsurface
runoff to define potential P bioavailability of
PP/DP forms
11- PARIS - Ecology studies
- Functional habitat-based sampling of macrophyte
biomass and macroinvertebrate density biomass - Microbial biomass (bacteria fungi), respiration
decomposition rates on standard leaf packs - In-stream algal biomass primary production on
standard experimental tiles
- Potential Ecological Impacts
- Change in processes from P-limited heterotrophy
increased decomposition rates - Increase in proportion of autotrophy
- Decrease in phosphatase activity.
- Shift in primary production towards macrophytes
- Increased shredder activity, lower diversity
12PARIS assessment of diffuse source P impacts on
river ecology
- Agricultural P contributions to rivers often
intermittent predominantly under winter high
flows - How significant are these diffuse inputs for
ecological impacts in relation to background
inputs? - Issues of memory and lag effects linked to
storage of diffuse sediment-associated P
delivered during (winter) storm events - New contributions to process understanding of
thresholds, lag effects and ecological
sensitivity to P in lowland agricultural streams